The Magnificent Ambersons

AS THE CREDITS ROLL: The (in)famously truncated studio version of Orson Welles’ masterpiece (from which more than an hour of footage was excised—and, tragically, lost forever), has no credit “roll.” Instead, we hear Welles read the names and contributions of his talented cast and crew.

THE MUSIC: “End Title,” composed by Bernard Hermann

SEMI-RELEVANT FACTOID: Conspicuously absent from the spoken end credits is the film’s composer. Furious that much of his work was cut in the studio version, Hermann (who had worked with Welles on Citizen Kane) demanded that his name be removed.

I am aghast that the closing credits to "Wild Things" isn't listed. Anyone who has seen it knows what I'm referring to, and if you haven't, you've missed one of the great guilty pleasures of B-movies made by B+ players (plus one A-list).

John Gonzalez: That was my first reaction, too. Ferris Bueller! Iconic. Classic as-the-credits-are-rolling, and the first I remember seeing like that. Also: The Avengerz had a pretty cool credits rolling scene, too. We sat and watched it, long after most of the audience had left-----only because someone had told us to wait and see.

You left out The Bad Seed, circa 1958. Creepy-as-you-want thriller about a sweet-looking eight-year-old girl whose mother gradually discovers is a psychopathic murderer (strong stuff for 1958.) The ending credits roll over the cast members being introduced one by one, and after Nancy Kelly, who played the mother, is introduced, she shakes her finger at someone offscreen, and we see her then go over to Patty McCormack, who played the little girl, turn her over her knee and proceed to pretend-spank her. It was funny, but some people complained that it broke the spell of the movie.

Not sure these qualify but most Jackie Chan movies including Rush Hour 1,2 & 3 should have made the list. Then there is Ferris Bueller's Day Off and, most recently, Argo. Now THAT one kept all but one person in the theater glued to their seats through the first part of the credits.

I cannot believe that they did not include the scene from lethal weapon3 where Riggs starts smoking again and says that he had a dog biscuit problem : he kept trying to lick himself and he kept falling off the couch

@KravenMoorehead If that was LW3, then it must have been LW2 to which I took my nephew way back when. He started to leave as the credits rolled, but I made him stay, and told him about the final images of "Airplane!" and "The Blues Brothers." Just as I finished, the credits ended, and a bonus scene played out. My unclely portfolio skyrocketed in value.